tech.memeorandum

Tech Web, page A1 … for 2:00 PM ET, November 19, 2005
Current Tech Page     Also:   Politics

Top Items:

Edward Wyatt / New York Times:
Googling Literature: The Debate Goes Public  —  If there was any point of agreement between publishers, authors and Google in a debate Thursday night over the giant Web company's program to digitize the collections of major libraries and allow users to search them online, it seemed to be this …
Phil Hochmuth / Techworld.com:
Cisco in space  —  IS IT A BIRD?  IS IT A PLANE?  NO, IT'S AN IP-ENABLED SATELLITE.  —  If you are a router company with as much as 80 percent market share and a $3.2 billion R&D budget to play with, why not bolt a router to a rocket and shoot it into orbit?
Om Malik / On Broadband, VoIP …:
Now its Cisco versus Motorola, Microsoft  —  Cisco had data, Cisco had voice, and what it needed was video to complete the triple play.  So they bought Scientific Atlanta for $6.9 billion. … The reasons for the deal are many, the most important being that the company the size of Cisco might …
Daniel Terdiman / CNET News.com:
Will small publishers still have game?  —  At the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco seven months ago, there was an undercurrent of fear.  —  Would sharply rising development costs, game developers worried, make designing games for the impending next-generation consoles …
Discussion: Joystiq
gameshout.com:
Wal-Mart only has three Xbox 360 units per store  —  According to some latest information, Microsoft has only sent three Xbox 360 units to smaller Wal-Mart stores, while the super centers only got 10.  —  The information comes from various GameSHOUT users and members who went around to each store from their own local cities and state.
Discussion: I4U News and Kotaku
Regina Lynn / Wired News:
You're Only a Newbie Once  —  Researching last week's column about adult webcam chat made me nostalgic for the online community I used to belong to.  The conversations in the webAffairs book could have taken place in my chat room, and I examined the screenshots closely to see if I recognized any faces or other body parts.
Margaret Kane / CNET News.com:
Early Xbox reviews: so-so  —  Early reviews of Microsoft's Xbox 360 are starting to appear and so far the reaction is: eh, it's okay.  —  "Good, but not great," says CNN.  "Don't buy the Xbox," The New York Post.  —  Most of the complaints seem to be surrounding the machine's high price, as opposed to its technical prowess.
Discussion: Gizmodo, Joystiq and Kotaku
USA Today:
CD woes may have had roots in merger  —  It sounded like music to record executives' ears.  —  Copy-protection software that would to do the impossible: make CDs that couldn't be repeatedly copied.  —  Britain's First 4 Internet landed meetings with the four major record labels, trying to sell software called XCP.
Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
EMI says its DRM will support the iPod  —  Apple has been loath to license its FairPlay DRM, used to protect songs sold from the iTunes Music Store.  That has been a sticking point for record companies, which yearn to provide iPod compatibility for their copy-protected discs.
computerworld.com.au:
IPv6 Forum chief: the new Internet is ready for consumption  —  IPv6 is not a pipedream.  Founder of the IPv6 Forum Latif Ladid took time out from the IPv6 summit in Canberra to talk to Computerworld about why the new Internet Protocol is a pie to be consumed here and now.
cbc.ca:
Mega Bloks wins SCOC ruling on Lego trademark  —  Canada's highest court ruled unanimously Thursday that Mega Bloks does indeed have business in the playrooms of the nation, along with Lego.  —  The Supreme Court of Canada decision marks the end of a long-running trademark battle between …
Discussion: Boing Boing
Brian Bergstein / Associated Press:
PRODUCT REVIEW: Podcasts Converted to Text  —  BOSTON - Suddenly the universe of downloadable audio files known as podcasts seems as enormous as the Internet.  Name a topic — from the weather in Asuncion to the ZigBee wireless technology — and there is a podcast about it.
Phone Scoop:
FCC Shows Rugged Pocket PC Phone From Panasonic  —  The FCC approved a new ruggedized Pocket PC Phone from Panasonic.  The Toughbook CF-P2 has both GSM/GPRS 850/1900 as well as 802.11b Wi-Fi and Blutooth.  It also features n full numeric keypad, LCD screen with light sensor for automatic backlight adjustment and SD slot.
Discussion: Engadget
Derek Slater / A Copyfighter's Musings:
How The Sony DRM Debacle Can Benefit the Digital Music Market  —  In discussing the impact of the Sony DRM debacle, Paul Resnikoff made a fairly bizarre assessment: "But just how aware is the average consumer in all of this? ...  A worst-case scenario would involve a high level of awareness, and subsequent drops in CD buying.
Discussion: Copyfight

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More Items:

Red / The Red Ferret Journal:
Laser Guided Pool Cue.
Discussion: Gizmodo
Ars Technica:
Blu-ray adopts mandatory managed copy, but says no to iHD
Matt Marshall / SiliconBeat:
Calendar company Trumba gets $8 million. Yep, it's crowded.

Earlier Picks:

Blake Snow / Joystiq:
Parents suing Blizzard for World of Warcraft addiction
Chris Kohler / Wired News:
Xbox 360 Hits a High-Def Homer
Oblivionabyss / It's a Mad, Mad Mind:
Back Off, Porky.  —  OKAY FOR THE READING IMPAIRED (PSSST …
Discussion: Blogspotting
 
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